Monday, October 10, 2016

Ready for the Electoral College? Take our quiz -- Oct. 6, 2016 column

Every four years, millions of Americans go to the polls and
vote for . . . a slate of electors. Take our 10-question quiz to brush up on the
Electoral College. Answers are below. No peeking – and no Googling!

QUESTIONS

What is the Electoral
College?

A.Scholars that wrote election law in the 19th
century

B.The process for electing the president and vice
president that dates to the 18th century

C.The undisclosed location where elected officials
learn law-making

D.A reality TV show

2.Why
do we have an Electoral College?

A.The
Constitution states that the “Electoral College” shall choose the president if
no candidate gets a majority of the popular vote

B.Every
president since George Washington has signed an executive order creating one

C.It’s
a compromise between electing the president by congressional vote or by popular vote of qualified people

D.The
Supreme Court said so

3. Who gets to be in the Electoral College?

A. Any elected official

B. Anyone who is not a member of Congress or a federal
official

C. Only registered voters

D. Only donors to the Republican and Democratic parties

4. True or false: Electors are legally bound to vote for
the presidential candidate who wins the most votes in their state.

5. The House of Representatives has 435 members, and there
are 100 senators. How many electors are in the Electoral College?

A. 100

B. 435

C. 535

D. 538

6. What happens if
no presidential candidate wins a majority of electoral votes -- 270?

A. The Senate elects the president from the top two
electoral vote-getters

B. The House of Representatives elects the president from
the top three electoral vote-getters

C. The Supreme Court elects the president

D. The 50 governors elect the president

7. Is it possible for the winner of the nationwide
popular vote for president not to win the electoral vote?

A.No,
the candidate who wins the most popular votes always wins

B.Yes,
because the popular vote does not choose the president. The Electoral College
does.

C.Yes,
because all but two states award their electoral votes on a winner-take-all
basis.

D.B
and C

8. How often has the winner of the nationwide popular
vote for president not won the electoral vote?

A. Never

B. Once

C. Twice

D. Four times

9. Where do the electors meet to cast their ballots?

A. Electors
from every state gather in Independence Hall in Philadelphia

B. Electors
gather in the U.S. Capitol

C. Electors
from each state meet in their states, usually in the state Capitol

D. Online

10. True or False. Congress could pass a law eliminating
the Electoral College.

Bonus Question: What happens on the first Monday after the
second Wednesday in December every four years?

ANSWERS

B. The framers of the Constitution agreed on
our indirect system of elections in 1787.

C. The framers compromised on having
“electors” choose the president and vice president. The words “electoral college”
are not in the Constitution, but “electors” appears in Article II and the
12th Amendment. We started using
the term electoral college in the 19th century and it’s now in federal
law.

B. Under the Constitution,
only U.S. senators, representatives and anyone holding “an Office of Trust
or Profit under the United States” are prohibited from being electors.

False. Neither the
Constitution nor federal law requires electors to follow the popular vote.
Many states have such laws, but not all.

5.D.
One for each House member and senators and three for the District of Columbia,
which is treated as a state, thanks to the 23rd Amendment.

6.B.
Each state’s delegation gets one vote.
The Senate would elect the vice president from the top two VP electoral candidates,
with each senator having one vote.

D. Only Maine and Nebraska
award their electoral votes on a proportional basis.

D. In 1824, 1876, 1888 and
2000.

C. The Electoral College
never meets as one big group.

False. To change or
eliminate the Electoral College would require a Constitutional amendment.

Bonus: That’s the day electors meet in each state to elect the
president and vice president. This year it’s Dec. 19.

Want to make your own
Electoral College predictions? Check out the National Archives’ interactive map
at http://bit.ly/2cVI0BP.

SCORING: 10 points for each correct answer, plus 5 points
for the bonus.

85 to 100 – You win the Electoral College bowl.

70 to 85 – Tenure at the Electoral College is yours.

55 to 70 – Politicians crave numbers like these.

45 to 55 – Your insight is blog-worthy.

25 to 40 – Don’t believe everything you read online.

Below 25 – There’s always 2020.

SOURCES: U.S.
National Archives and Records Administration, Congressional Research Service,
U.S. Department of State, U.S. House Offices of Historian and Art and Archives